They say that chemistry is everything when it comes to romantic screen pairings.
As the star-crossed couple who carry on a cyberspace romance that has trouble translating
into real life, Hanks and Ryan double-click in You've Got Mail. Unlike actors in
many contemporary movie romances, they connect in that undefinable but unmistakable
way, their attraction to each other as natural and inevitable as taking the next
breath. Both Hanks and, more particularly, Ryan have heavily relied on certain expressions
to play cute in the past -- she often scrunches up her face and flashes a gummy grin,
he's prone to looking befuddled and skeptical at the same time -- but those mannerisms
don't obscure their characters' mutual attraction here. Nora and Delia Ephron's screenplay
begins smartly as it charts the movie's online love affair, observing that strange
intimacy in the context of the bustling and impersonal streets of New York City.
(The joke goes that the one, true love of your life may walk right past you on the
sidewalk, and you'll never know it.) Things get complicated when the two chatliners
unknowingly meet and end up disliking each other upon discovering that they are Upper
West Side business rivals: She owns a quaint children's bookstore, a neighborhood
fixture for over 40 years, while he's building a nearby superbookstore that sells
everything at a discount, except for the cappuccino. The war between competing enterprises
escalates into a war between the sexes, with the embattled finding themselves oddly
attracted to the other without knowing why. Eventually, one of them finds out who
the other is, a development that you could characterize as either a vaguely sexist
plot device or a canny means by which to entice the movie's female audience. As in
Ephron's other directorial efforts (Sleepless in Seattle), the secondary characters
in You've Got Mail are flat and almost superfluous; when Hanks and Ryan aren't onscreen
together, you're antsy until they reappear. That's how good the two are as a pair
-- everyone can't help but pale in comparison. In many ways, You've Got Mail is a
valentine to the happenstance miracle of lovers and other strangers, a movie that
regards modern romance as something that is, ultimately, old-fashioned to its core.
It's that classic sense of timelessness that makes You've Got Mail an appealing love
story for these and all other times.
--Steve Davis
Full Length Reviews
You've Got Mail 
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You've Got Mail 
Other Films by Nora Ephron
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Film Vault Suggested Links
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Never Been Kissed 
Notting Hill 
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